This text sets out the conceptual imperative and political
consistency of the post-colonial intellectual project. This series
of essays explains why the post-colonial critique has altered
forever the landscape of postmodern discourse. It examines, among
other things, the displacement of the colonizer's legitimizing
cultural authority and looks at the complex cultural and political
boundaries which exist in between the spheres of gender, race,
class and sexuality. This work illuminates a diverse range of texts
in an attempt to specify the moment and the place of both colonial
and post-colonial perspectives. The author discusses writers such
as Morrison, Gordimer and Rushdie and historical documents such as
those on the Indian Mutiny.
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